Interview: Wong Kar-Wai, Tony Leung And Zhang Ziyi Talk THE GRANDMASTER
By Diva Vélez
Published on August 23, 2013 in TwitchFilm.com
Director Wong Kar-Wai is renowned for legendarily long
incubation periods for his films. Five years after his last movie, Director Wong
brings us The Grandmaster, his kung fu-filled biopic of Wing Chun master, Ip
Man, which reunites him with 2046's Zhang Ziyi and the Mastroianni to his
Fellini, the Mifune to his Kurosawa, Tony Leung. During a hectic New York
promotional trip, yours truly was able to have a few words with the director and
his stars about why the multiple Ip Man films didn't faze Wong one bit, Leung's
Bruce Lee connection and Zhang's retirement from martial arts films.
Twitch: Director Wong, the US cut of THE GRANDMASTER is different from the one
that was shown in Asia and in the Berlin International Film Festival. What has
changed from the earlier edit?
Wong Kar-Wai: This cut is shorter than the Berlin version and also it's very
different because we restructured the story; we tell the story in a more linear
way. What's so special about this version is there's 15 to 20 minutes of unseen
footage, so it's not going to be a short version; it's going to be a US version.
It is going to be a brand new version. And also for this film, we have the
support of Dolby, so this film will be in Dolby Atmos System, so it will be the
first Dolby Atmos System Chinese-language film, so I think it will be very
exciting.
Is the movie's title, THE GRANDMASTER, a bit deceptive? One might presume you
are referring specifically to Ip Man, but it also encompasses the lives of the
other kung fu masters in the film like Zhang Ziyi's and Chang Chen's characters.
WK-W: In fact, that's a very good question. Since we went through this process,
I can tell you the changes, the metamorphoses of all the different titles. At
the beginning, we called this film The Grandmaster, because we thought it was
going to be about Ip Man, and then later on we felt like it's not only about Ip
Man. There's so many grandmasters in the film, so we called the film The
Grandmasters. But at the end, when we finished the film and I looked at the
film, this was some advice from my son, actually, he said, "Well, I don't think
you should call this film The Grandmasters because it's not very catchy." He
said, "You should call the film The Grandmaster, because it's not about the
number of grandmasters in the film, it's really about the state of mind of being
a grandmaster." And I think that makes sense, so we changed the title back to
The Grandmaster. It seems like a back and forth, but in fact it shows in us so
well what process we went through during the making of this film.
Ms. Zhang, I've always admired Director Wong's depiction of women in his films,
but Gong Er is like someone we've never seen. She has many of the traits one
associates with males in kung fu movies; she's the inheritor of the house, she
displays the filial piety, she challenges the other masters and seeks revenge
for the family honour, but somehow she retains her femininity. How did you first
read Gong Er and what was there that you added in that might not have been in
the script originally?
Zhang Ziyi: First of all, there's no script. That's a Wong Kar-Wai specialty
{Laughs}, but I still love him. I believe there is a Gong Er in every single
woman. I love this character, that's why I am very grateful to Wong Kar-Wai even
though he tortured me for so long. I think you have to be yourself, know
yourself and do what feels right. So, for me, I think the character developed
between our trust, because I don't know the script, I don't know my character. I
only knew my character and the story before the movie opened in China. So, for
me, everything's new, but during the process, I learned so much. I felt so much
of the character. I think I'm just the luckiest actress in the world because a
character like this, you will never know her again. It just happens once in your
life. That's why I said in China that I don't want to do any more martial arts
films because I don't believe there's another role that can surpass this.
WK-W: {Regarding working without a script} Basically, it's like we all know this
before we start a film. The process is a little bit different; I think the most
general way to make a film is first of all, you have a script and then you make
the film according to that. Because I'm also the writer and I know more or less
where the story goes; one of the reasons I don't want to have a full script is
because I don't want to stick myself. And the other way is just imagine The
Grandmasters; we announced the film and then later on we have like seven
Grandmasters, it's the story about Ip Man, and I'm not very fast. So there were
like six or seven films about Ip Man released, but that's not a problem.
The one thing that I will say is once you work with actors and actresses like
Tony, who I've worked with before, I know how high they can fly. And in fact
like the character of Gong Er is basically something I want to borrow from Ziyi
herself, because she looks very in a way petite or feminine, but in fact, what I
can see is that she's a fighter. In a way, the character of Gong Er is very,
very difficult because you have to understand that at the time in 1946, it's
like the early days of the Republic. There were a lot of great men because we
went through the transition from a monarchy into a republic, and there are new
ideas and there are new passions to build the young country. At the same time,
there were also great women from all walks of life - they were martial artists,
they were opera singers, they are intellectuals, they are like artists. - and
these women, they all have a dream; they don't want to be bound to the
traditional role of being a good wife and a good mother. They made their share
to build this country and they want to have their own identity. So in the film,
they go through the training to become a martial artist; you also have to train
to be a doctor, to be a singer. The thing is it's very hard to portray the women
in those days without the elegance, without the air. They are very civilised;
they are not just fighters, they are from a very civilised family, and in a way
in the film like Tony Leung's character of Ip Man. Zhang Ziyi, the character of
Gong Er doesn't only mean a woman or comrade in the same discipline, but also a
time that is almost like a Paradise Lost that was best of his life.
For Mr. Leung and Ms. Zhang, the film is based not only on the life of Ip Man,
someone who lived and still has people alive who remember him, but also deals
with very authentic principles of martial arts that are practised today. Did
that basis in reality affect your approach or your own research into playing Ip
Man and Gong Er?
Tony Leung: I was lucky because I had a real character to work on this time.
Kar-Wai showed me a lot of books; martial arts novels in the new republic period
so I had a chance to understand all the culture and the customs of the martial
arts world during that period of time. And he asked me to merge Bruce Lee's
character into Ip Man, too. Of course I didn't know why: I didn't know how can I
merge Bruce Lee when I cannot fight like {Does Bruce Lee kung fu imitation -
with sound effects}, but he asked me to, so I studied, and because Bruce Lee
left us a lot of books about his vision of kung fu and the philosophy of kung fu
and his understanding of kung fu and this really helped me to build up the
confidence; to build up the soul of The Grandmaster. It really helped.
For Ip Man, I only had information after he settled down in Hong Kong. I saw his
picture. I learned about Ip Man from my kung fu master because he was the
student of Ip Man, and I learned about how difficult his life was in Hong Kong.
What I saw from his picture is that he didn't look like a kung fu man; he looked
like a scholar. Very refined, erudite and graceful. I could feel the dignity in
his eyes and he always wore a smile. I think that is so amazing; how can someone
look like that if he went through that difficult life in Hong Kong? I wanted to
know how he can do that.
So after all this study, I think kung fu might've inspired him. Kar-Wai said,
"He is very optimistic." I said, "No, not just optimistic. Kung fu might've
inspired him to deal with life." After I studied all the books from Bruce Lee, I
know that kung fu is not just fighting techniques, but also a way of training
your mind, kind of like meditation in Buddhism. How to keep your mind free from
emotion and desire. Actually, the goal of kung fu is not to oppose your
opponent, or to give way, but to be harmonised with your opponents. If you put
it in real life, it's just like you tried to be in harmony with nature and the
whole world and not trying to oppose or give way. I think kung fu really
inspired this man, so he can move on.
ZZ: I didn't have any books because the character is fictional, but for me this
kind of training and feeling is not so strange because I used to be a dancer and
I trained for six years professionally. So I understand what Tony said, because
it's not only to train your body - physical work - it's about training your
brain and building up the strength. That's what I learned with my dance
background.
For this movie, I didn't think that much, I didn't do any research. For me, I
don't want to think too much, I just wanted to concentrate on the training, and
slowly, because I didn't know my character at all and Wong Kar-Wai didn't tell
me that much, as well, so I think we built up the character together as we
[were] shooting, so I understood her a little bit more and better. I knew that
she is living in this kind of a world: She needed a lot of strength and power to
get the life that she wants. Because the story of her is she's not allowed to do
a lot of things, but she doesn't believe this, that's why she represents the
independence and she represents the strength.
Ms. Zhang, you've said this is your final martial arts film. How much do you
think that conviction will stick?
ZZ: I've had so much injuries from a long time ago in Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon; I hurt my neck. And shooting House of Flying Daggers, just something
happened that I felt was for a long time, but it was only a few seconds. Those
old injuries really bother me and after three years of this one ... First of
all, my body cannot take it anymore, and also I just think nothing can really
surpass this level of acting and craft - everything. So, I think this is pretty
good to just leave a good memory.
Mr. Leung, this was your first kung fu film, but you broke your arm twice during
production, how likely are you to do another kung fu movie?
TL: I really don't mind to do a kung fu movie. If I can do it with Kar-Wai, I
can do it with anybody. He is the most demanding director I have ever worked
with...
{ZZ Laughs}
TL: ... with such a long period of time. At the end, I told him many times
almost a few months before we finished, I said, "I cannot do it anymore. I'm
really so tired."
ZZ: So tired...
TL: But he was more pale than me, so... {Laughs}
Director Wong, did making this film based on a real-life person and also on
authentic martial arts and their philosophies, not just imaginary or fantasy
martial arts, affect your approach in terms of research or the way you laid out
the narrative?
WK-W: Yeah, sure, because when you look at the film, you can't have too much
liberties, because first of all Tony and Ziyi, they are not from martial arts
backgrounds, and I wanted them to perform all the action by themselves; so in
all the action scenes, you have to be very precise. So you need to take weeks of
choreography and rehearsal, and on set you have to work with the camera. So
everything had to be very precise.
Also, I wanted to tell the story because there are so many stories about Ip Man,
but I wanted to tell the story about Ip Man which was really true and
historically correct because I didn't want to show him like just a fighter, or
to make up some episode about fighting the Japanese, or fighting the Western
fighters, because it didn't happen. I know they want to make him look more
heroic, but in this film what I find from Ip Man is in fact it's more heroic for
him to fight not a physical opponent, it's actually fighting with time and the
ups and downs of his life. Because when we look at his life story, he was born
with a silver spoon and he lost almost everything except the commitment to these
martial arts. He went through so many different periods to remain at the end the
last man standing.
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